This story is from October 30, 2023

German economy shrinks slightly in Q3

Germany's economy contracted by 0.1% in the third quarter, according to data from the federal statistics office. This is worse than the forecasted 0.3% contraction and suggests that Germany is becoming one of the slowest-growing economies in the eurozone. Weak purchasing power, higher interest rates, and geopolitical uncertainties are all factors weighing down the German economy. Furthermore, Commerzbank expects the economy to contract again in the next quarter.
German economy shrinks slightly in Q3
File photo
BERLIN: Germany's economy shrank slightly in the third quarter, data showed on Monday, as Europe's largest economy continues to be weighed down by weak purchasing power and higher interest rates.
Gross domestic product fell by 0.1% quarter on quarter in adjusted terms, the federal statistics office said.
A Reuters poll had forecast the economy to shrink by 0.3%.

"These data alone underline that the German economy has at least become one of the growth laggards of the euro zone," said Carsten Brzeski, global head of macro at ING.
Looking ahead, the ongoing pass-through of the European Central Bank's monetary policy tightening, still no reversal of the inventory cycle and new geopolitical uncertainties will continue weighing on the German economy, Brzeski said.
"The German economy looks set to remain in the twilight zone between minor contraction and stagnation not only this year but also next year," Brzeski said.
The contraction in the third quarter is not seen as an outlier, as Commerzbank expects the German economy to contract again in the winter half-year.

"Consumption is unlikely to recover as optimists had hoped," Commerzbank's chief economist Joerg Kraemer said.
Household consumption fell in the third quarter, as high inflation continued to erode consumers' purchasing power.
Due to base effects in food and energy prices, Germany's headline CPI rate is expected to fall further in October. Inflation data will be published later on Monday.
On the other hand, capital investment made a positive contribution to GDP, the statistics office said.
"The net result, however, is that Germany's economy is now firmly stuck in the mud," Pantheon Macroeconomics' chief eurozone economist Claus Vistesen said, adding the he doubts the economy will emerge from the mud in the fourth quarter.
The statistics office, however, revised the figure for the second quarter to a modest 0.1% expansion, from stagnation.
The figure for the first quarter was revised to stagnation, from a previous contraction that had led the economy into recession. A recession is defined as two consecutive quarters of contraction in GDP.
End of Article
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA